
Rare Dale prototype displayed beginning on April Fool’s Day at Museum of American Speed
LINCOLN, Neb. – It’s appropriate that when the Speedway Motors Museum of American Speed in Lincoln re-opens on April 1, one of the most unique cars in the collection started by Bill and Joyce Smith will be on prominent display. After all, the Dale was an attempt to fool a lot of people out of a lot of money. The three-wheeled, lightweight concept car designed by Dale Clift was to be powered by a motorcycle engine and engineered to get 70 miles to the gallon. Not by coincidence, many Americans still had the Arab oil embargo and high fuel prices and shortages in the back of their mind when they got their first look at the Dale on the TV show The Price Is Right. The new Twentieth Century Motor Car Corporation took hundreds of orders at around $2,000 a pop. Things were looking promising for Dale promoter Liz Carmichael before a prototype, one of only three built, tipped over during a test run for potential investors. The Dale never made it to production. The transgender [Read More]